Neighborhoods in 20 metros with the most expensive home sales
Published 8:30 pm Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Roschetzky Photography // Shutterstock
Neighborhoods in 20 metros with the most expensive home sales
After home prices climbed by a record-setting 16.9% nationwide in 2021, the market was met with another stunning statistic in April 2022: 11 American metros now have a median home sold price of more than $500,000. The half-million dollar average sale price metric comes from an OJO Labs survey of March home sales. Nationwide, the median sales price of a home reached $392,750 as of mid-April 2022.
In historically wealthy cities and those with more modest home prices, the trajectory is the same: Prices keep going up even as mortgage rates spike. Causes for the price jumps are mirrored across the country. A long-term housing shortage that began after the Great Recession was exacerbated by supply chain disruptions that made it harder to source construction material, which affected virtually all housing markets. Another factor that has driven up prices is the rise of investors that have entered the market. In many regions including Charlotte, North Carolina, investment firms are buying up huge swaths of single-family homes.
In smaller cities and towns, traditionally lower population numbers were met with a swell of households moving away from big cities during the coronavirus pandemic, driving competition up for housing. Record-low mortgage rates were another reason for an exploding number of buyers, although rising rates don’t seem to be doing much to slow bidding wars in many metros.
To illustrate this point, real estate platform ZeroDown analyzed its data on home listings across 20 metropolitan areas in the United States to determine the most expensive neighborhood in each, based on homes sold between March 18, 2022 and April 18, 2022. Neighborhoods are ranked by the median home price per square foot.
Metros selected for this list range from those known for historically modest bungalows to those renowned for expensive zip codes. Some represent massive increases in home sale prices, such as the previously affordable city of Phoenix, which has led the country in home price increases for 33 months straight as of April 2022. Downtown Phoenix, in particular, saw a nearly 30% price increase between March of 2021 and 2022.
Other metros we included—such as Los Angeles, Boston, and San Francisco—illustrate a widening wealth gap, which keeps residents earning fewer than six figures priced out of homeownership in those cities.
The list represents both coasts and most geographic regions of the U.S. In addition to median home prices, we’ve included data points for each metro covering median rent, neighborhood population, walk score, bike score, and transit score.
Read on to see how your city’s most expensive neighborhood compares to those across the country.
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Phoenix: Downtown Phoenix
– Median home price: $486,506 ($365 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,098
– Neighborhood population: 9,150
– Walk score: 89
– Bike score: 64
– Transit score: 65
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Raleigh, North Carolina: Five Points
– Median home price: $559,615 ($518 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,177
– Neighborhood population: 8,222
– Walk score: 41
– Bike score: 60
– Transit score: 42
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Las Vegas: Reverence
– Median home price: $1,199,007 ($519 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,754
– Neighborhood population: 46
– Walk score: data not available
– Bike score: 36
– Transit score: data not available
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Philadelphia: Woodland
– Median home price: $665,973 ($586 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,326
– Neighborhood population: 4,656
– Walk score: 71
– Bike score: 79
– Transit score: 86
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Portland, Oregon: Eliot
– Median home price: $740,443 ($597 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,304
– Neighborhood population: 4,570
– Walk score: 82
– Bike score: 86
– Transit score: 71
Homes on the water with downtown in the background.
Sacramento, California: Curtis Park
– Median home price: $810,174 ($599 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,228
– Neighborhood population: 6,090
– Walk score: 78
– Bike score: 91
– Transit score: 48
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San Antonio: Downtown
– Median home price: $700,118 ($628 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,013
– Neighborhood population: 5,704
– Walk score: 82
– Bike score: 59
– Transit score: 84
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Denver: Washington Park West
– Median home price: $917,130 ($666 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,602
– Neighborhood population: 7,804
– Walk score: 81
– Bike score: 87
– Transit score: 65
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Miami: Venetian Islands
– Median home price: $900,769 ($671 per square foot)
– Median rent: $2,182
– Neighborhood population: 1,508
– Walk score: 23
– Bike score: data not available
– Transit score: 48
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Charlotte, North Carolina: Eastover
– Median home price: $2,652,477 ($686 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,502
– Neighborhood population: 4,725
– Walk score: 38
– Bike score: 30
– Transit score: 35
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Atlanta: Wyngate
– Median home price: $6,497,998 ($700 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,640
– Neighborhood population: 618
– Walk score: 9
– Bike score: 20
– Transit score: 35
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Tampa, Florida: Downtown Tampa
– Median home price: $524,921 ($708 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,458
– Neighborhood population: 1,968
– Walk score: 76
– Bike score: data not available
– Transit score: 66
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Baltimore: Gay Street
– Median home price: $193,494 ($852 per square foot)
– Median rent: N/A
– Neighborhood population: N/A
– Walk score: 70
– Bike score: 71
– Transit score: 76
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Dallas: Dallas Arts District
– Median home price: $2,197,881 ($919 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,556
– Neighborhood population: 997
– Walk score: 86
– Bike score: 64
– Transit score: 82
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Austin, Texas: Bouldin Creek
– Median home price: $1,298,869 ($1,024 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,498
– Neighborhood population: 4,805
– Walk score: 93
– Bike score: 86
– Transit score: 56
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Seattle: Central Business District
– Median home price: $3,075,581 ($1,230 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,934
– Neighborhood population: 6,186
– Walk score: 99
– Bike score: 86
– Transit score: 100
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Nashville, Tennessee: McPherson Place
– Median home price: $1,592,800 ($1,458 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,267
– Neighborhood population: 47
– Walk score: 9
– Bike score: 20
– Transit score: data not available
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Boston: Boston Common / Park Square
– Median home price: $3,801,874 ($1,586 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,250
– Neighborhood population: 1,292
– Walk score: 98
– Bike score: 79
– Transit score: 100
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San Francisco: Financial District
– Median home price: $2,176,012 ($1,654 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,869
– Neighborhood population: 13,041
– Walk score: 100
– Bike score: 85
– Transit score: 100
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Los Angeles: Elysian Park
– Median home price: $2,246,770 ($2,518 per square foot)
– Median rent: $1,346
– Neighborhood population: 2,398
– Walk score: 22
– Bike score: 9
– Transit score: 45
This story originally appeared on ZeroDown
and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.